We have survived the first snow of the season!
The snow started falling around 7pm and fell for several hours before turning back into rain and then moving out. We woke up this morning to clear skies and crunchy, icy remnants on the driveway, sidewalk and grass. It was very much like the snow fall we had in Alabama.
It was really exciting to see it falling out the window. We always loved to sit and watch it before we moved-- you know, that one day a year we got an inch of snow. I know the novelty of it will wear off, but for now, we are enjoying our little intro to New England snow (even if it did come before Halloween).
Friday, October 28, 2011
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Indigo Girls
Mr. Awesome (The Engineer) forwent a GooGoo Dolls concert to take me to an Indigo Girls concert.
(I dare you to tell me that doesn't make him the most amazing guy in the world...)
There were some extenuating circumstances surrounding the GooGoo Dolls concert-- such as they rescheduled for a date we couldn't do. The tickets had been his surprise birthday present, but unfortunately (for The Engineer), it didn't work out with the new date. Luckily (for me), the Indigo Girls happened to be preforming that same night, less than two miles away, for half the price, AND it was a benefit concert to raise money for a local auditorium. (Are there any better reasons to use as justification?!)
Thankfully, the opening band, Common Rotation, was awesome! So awesome that for The Engineer's birthday he got to get two of their albums. (This is also thanks to reasonable album pricing by the band-- Thanks guys!) I also think this made up for the fact that we were indeed at an Indigo Girls concert for his birthday. ;o)
After about three songs of the Indigo Girls I looked over at The Engineer and apologized for bringing him to Lilith Fair. It was hilarious to see a room full of middle-aged women going nuts! He was a good sport and we actually both had a great time. They sounded just as good as they do on their albums. I told The Engineer I thought this might be due to the time they got started as a band. Back then you actually had to have talent to be a star. Now, if you have the right persona and engage the media correctly even if you can't carry a tune in a bucket you can be a star. (*cough *cough, Taylor Swift, *cough *cough, Lady Gaga.)
(I dare you to tell me that doesn't make him the most amazing guy in the world...)
There were some extenuating circumstances surrounding the GooGoo Dolls concert-- such as they rescheduled for a date we couldn't do. The tickets had been his surprise birthday present, but unfortunately (for The Engineer), it didn't work out with the new date. Luckily (for me), the Indigo Girls happened to be preforming that same night, less than two miles away, for half the price, AND it was a benefit concert to raise money for a local auditorium. (Are there any better reasons to use as justification?!)
Thankfully, the opening band, Common Rotation, was awesome! So awesome that for The Engineer's birthday he got to get two of their albums. (This is also thanks to reasonable album pricing by the band-- Thanks guys!) I also think this made up for the fact that we were indeed at an Indigo Girls concert for his birthday. ;o)
Indigo Girls with Common Rotation singing "Closer to Fine" |
Indigo Girls |
After about three songs of the Indigo Girls I looked over at The Engineer and apologized for bringing him to Lilith Fair. It was hilarious to see a room full of middle-aged women going nuts! He was a good sport and we actually both had a great time. They sounded just as good as they do on their albums. I told The Engineer I thought this might be due to the time they got started as a band. Back then you actually had to have talent to be a star. Now, if you have the right persona and engage the media correctly even if you can't carry a tune in a bucket you can be a star. (*cough *cough, Taylor Swift, *cough *cough, Lady Gaga.)
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Notables
- The sky seems closer here. The Engineer and I both said this to different people around the same time. I'm not sure why we feel this way, but we both thought it.
- The Fall color is awesome! Even going to the grocery store is beautiful!
- Turkeys on the side of the road here are as plentiful as deer on the side of the road in Alabama. And, they are HUGE.
- The Fall foliage is still showing itself in places, though from what I can tell, peak has passed. I don't have a picture, but all the trees and bushes in the Target parking lot were red and my thought was, "Well played, Target. Well played."
- Our dog has discovered squirrels. It is hilarious! He will stand on the edge of the deck and stare at them until he thinks they aren't watching and he will take off after them. At first he didn't understand that they climbed the trees. He just knew for some reason they disappeared. He has since figured that part out.
- Starting a business isn't hard as long as you have lots of free time and lots of money.
- I LOVE having NPR on every other radio station, and I love that they play all my favorite programs every day. It's such a thrill to listen to them "Live" instead of just as a podcast! (Yes, that equals nerd, and I'm okay with that.)
- Gas dropped below $3.40 last week. That is indeed notable.
- I miss having a schedule some days.
- Laundry and dishes are never done.
Monday, October 24, 2011
Dining Room
We've finally gotten things pretty much settled in the dining room. I'm loving my vase that was purchased at a yard sale from an artist named Lois Wills. She is sooo talented! (From what I understand, she is in the process of getting a web site going, so as soon as I have a link, I'll add it.)
I've also been enjoying my table runners that were made special for my wedding by several ladies that went to the church I grew up in. It makes them all the more special to have.
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Reminiscing
We are finally getting around to hanging photos and such on the walls and actually printing out some of our photos from our big adventure last Christmas. It was a lot of fun looking back through and remembering all the fun! Here are a few photos we printed out that are now hanging on the wall and making us smile.
Labels:
Christmas,
Eiffel tower,
Europe,
Florence,
France,
Italy,
memories,
Paris,
Rome,
st peter's basilica
Fall
Our neighbor's tree. It's among the last to start turning on the street and it's pretty nice to look out the window in the morning and see it showing off it's color.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
(Mostly) Happy Pup
Admittedly, this guy has not had the easiest time adjusting to the move. He looks at us a lot as if to say, "Hey, this has been a fun vacation, but when are we going home?" And, when we get ready to leave for work, or errands, or dinner, or whatever, he often gives us a look that says, "Hey, wait, don't forget me! I want to go home too! Don't leave me here!"
In between woeful looks, he does give us some happy faces. Especially when he's playing with his yellow ball or his bone.
He's going to make it and we are confident that at some point he will realize that we are "home" and that we aren't leaving him forever when we go to the grocery store.
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Bent Object of My Affection
Bent Object of My Affection is a must have!
Go buy it right now at your local independent bookstore-- http://www.indiebound.org/hybrid?filter0=bent+objects&x=42&y=10
Terry will also sign one for you if you go to his site and purchase the book there-- http://bentobjects.blogspot.com/
Seriously, go. Right now. The rest of the blogs in your reader, including this one, can wait.
Terry's first book, Bent Objects: The Secret Life of Everyday Things, was awesome, so while you're there, buy it, too!
Mall Food
Please take a good look at the Texas BBQ Factory.
Please also notice that it is a Chinese restaurant.
I don't understand.
In other food court news, this made me it feel a little like home.
I do miss the stand-alone CFA though, because this one doesn't do breakfast and life just isn't the same without Chicken Minis.
Monday, October 17, 2011
It Makes Me Slightly Nervous
When I see all the full walls of scarves, hats and gloves. I do not know that I can ever truly be prepared for the Winter that lies ahead. It seems like every store has multiple walls like this.
Thankfully, I have a new friend who has been giving me lots of great tips on surviving our first Winter. And she grew up in Maine, so I think she knows a thing or two about Winter.
Thankfully, I have a new friend who has been giving me lots of great tips on surviving our first Winter. And she grew up in Maine, so I think she knows a thing or two about Winter.
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Photo Drive
Took a little drive around the other day and knew one spot I had to go: the Martha-Mary Chapel.
The chapel sits on the grounds of the Wayside Inn. The Wayside Inn is the oldest operating inn in America. They were first licensed in 1716, and continue to operate today. Other things to see on the grounds include a Grist Mill and the Redstone School House, which legend has, is the school to which Mary's little lamb followed her.The Inn was purchased from its original family by Henry Ford in the 1920s. He had the school house relocated to the grounds and had the chapel built and named after his mother and mother-in-law. His goal was to preserve what America was like during that time period. The Wayside Inn is one of several sites for which he had this vision. Others can be found in Dearborn, Michigan, and Richmond Hill, Georgia.
The school was in operation as a one-room schoolhouse until the mid-1950s.
Here are a couple of shots of the grist mill, chapel and school house from last year during the summer.
And, the following are a few shots taken along the drive to the Wayside Inn. The Fall really is beautiful!
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Carrier Store versus Apple Store
Here's the question--
Do you get your new iPhone at the Apple Store or your carrier's store? Because there seems to be a huge difference in the number of people at each place.
AT&T is the only carrier shown below, but the story was the same at the Verizon store.
People in a long line with a full (and I do mean FULL) store at the Apple Store, and no huge line and just a handful of people at the AT&T store. They were not out of phones at any of the carrier stores, so I just couldn't figure out why you'd stand in line at the Apple Store when you could get the same thing a lot faster literally 150 feet further down the mall.
Any suggestions?
Friday, October 14, 2011
AT&T: A How To Guide
How to take your number from one family plan from your home state, and your husbands from another family plan in his home state, to create your own family plan in the North.
Step 1:
You Can't.
Step 2:
Keep talking to people to try to figure out some way to make it happen.
Step 3:
Give up and admit defeat.
We have made numerous phone calls and visits to AT&T stores to try to achieve our initial goal. We have finally come up with a work-around which involves an admission of partial defeat.
Here's how the process went:
Day 1:
Day 2:
Day 3:
Day 4:
Day 5:
Step 1:
You Can't.
Step 2:
Keep talking to people to try to figure out some way to make it happen.
Step 3:
Give up and admit defeat.
We have made numerous phone calls and visits to AT&T stores to try to achieve our initial goal. We have finally come up with a work-around which involves an admission of partial defeat.
Here's how the process went:
Day 1:
- Get account numbers from current accounts from primary account holders. (Remember, both are more than 1000 miles away.)
Day 2:
- Call AT&T to get everything rolling and get all the way through the process (30+minutes) before the customer service representative realizes she can't do it. She doesn't know why and gets her supervisor who says there was a way to do it and gives us an explanation (45+minutes) that was confusing and turns out was also impossible.
Day 3:
- Go to AT&T store to try to get clarification on the possibility of combining phone numbers from different markets(states) into a single family plan.
- Receive explanation that seems satisfactory and makes goal look achievable.
- Leave disappointed that it can't happen right away because a release of one phone number from previous family plan is needed.
- Make phone call to primary account holder and have them call AT&T to release the line. This is done in less than an hour and seems to have been the easiest part. (Thanks PPS!)
Day 4:
- Go back to AT&T store to explain situation and get new account started now that all the "ducks are in a row".
- Talk to extremely nice sales guy who explains that nothing we have been told up to this point is correct. The phone numbers cannot ever be combined into a single account no matter what.
- Find out that it is possible for one of us to keep our original number but the other person has to get a new number in the same area code as the one who keeps their number.
- Settle on this being the only option that will work.
- Discuss and decide who will keep their original number since we've both had our numbers for 10+ years.
- Share decision with sales guy.
- Find out we will have to come back tomorrow.
- Enjoy seeing a light bulb go off over our heads when we realize we can just port the second number into GoogleTalk and therefore, technically still keep both original numbers.
- Do a small happy dance.
- Hang out in basement blogging about the experience while singing along as your husband jams out Papa Roach, Creed and 3 Doors Down on his oh-so-cool green electric guitar.
Day 5:
- Return to AT&T store to get new account set up and FINALLY get new phone.
- Do a BIG happy dance along with the other three people in line with you that are also upgrading from an iPhone 3G.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Notables
- I heard the geese flying over today. This is apparently not a great sign for the winter ahead.
- My daily observations are restricted to a pretty small area-- you know, the one I'm in on a daily basis. They by no means define the entire North, or the entire Northern experience. Some are specific to my state. Some are just random things that natives haven't even had happen before. Keep that in mind when you're reading.
- Book Clubs seem popular here.
- The One City, One Book program is awesome. The author of our book this year is coming to speak next weekend. I'm excited to hear him and get his explanation of a few things. I also have a book review post coming.
- Our library lets you check out books on your Kindle. How awesome is that?!
- At dinner last night we heard two guys mention two names that perked our ears right up-- Garcia and Lattimore. Yes, they were talking SEC football, and even though it was the Gamecocks, it was still SEC football. I wanted them to be my new best friends, but The Engineer would not let me leave our table. (He's pretty good about keeping me from embarrassing myself more than I normally would.)
- Wal-Mart sells live lobster.
- I think I will always be a dunce when ordering at Starbucks. I think I have it down and then when I get to the cashier I panic and can only say "small, medium and large" in conjunction to mispronouncing the name of the actual item I am wanting to purchase. I should have taken lessons from Amber before I moved. I have not given up on myself yet, but this series of failures leads me to believe I may never get this one right.
- Some of the mailboxes face the sidewalk instead of the street. (I wonder how many mailboxes got hit and how many cars lost their side-view mirror before they changed it?)
- We live near a river and there is a walking/biking path built across it. I try to take my dog for a walk there every day. It is beautiful! And, I'm pretty sure my little buddy enjoys it too...
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
It's A Sign
This is one of those that are pretty unique to our area. Our friends said they hadn't seen them in many other places. |
Monday, October 10, 2011
Swagger...
I'm posting this in honor of The Engineer...
If you didn't see this game you should search the internet for the highlight reel. An impromptu decision gave the punter a would-be 52-yard touchdown run. However, due to an "excessive celebration" call it was called back to the 10ish yard line. Either way, great play calling by the punter himself. Bummer he had to be the guinea pig on a new rule. Would have loved to see an Aussie punter get a TD.
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Lazy Bones
Two bags full of 'em--
Looks like these guys are getting settled in and claiming their space. The cat had to pick the nicest pillow we have to call hers. She has her own bed and even access to the pup's throne-like bed, but no, she prefers the one silk item we have in the house... What a princess. (I blame The Engineer for this.)
Friday, October 7, 2011
From the Yard
I mowed the lawn today and there were TONS of these mushrooms growing.
You can also see that half of our grass is dead. It was like that when we got here, so I cannot be blamed for killing off the grass (ahem, yet, cough, cough).
Also, one of the mystery bushes in front of the house has bloomed. It looks like an Azalea flower, but the leaves are not like any I've seen on an Azalea bush before. You master gardeners out there got any suggestions as to what it might be?
Ah, of course, the acorn. These things are everywhere. It's no wonder the squirrels are so big! They seem to have more than plenty to get them through the winter. If I showed you a photo of how many half eaten ones are laying in the side yard you probably still wouldn't believe it.
Thursday, October 6, 2011
007
Just call him "Double O" for short. The pup is officially licensed!
(Location and actual identifying information was removed to protect his safety in the field. When you're licensed you can't be too careful...) |
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Sad Day
Whether you love Apple or hate them you cannot ignore the impact the company has had on the world as we know it. Specifically the world in which I have lived. Being born in the early 80s, I remember a time when there weren't computers in every home (you know, before Al Gore "invented the Internet"). My world went from one with landlines in every home, few cellular phones(you know, the ones with the corded receiver that came in a bag and stayed in the car), and a lot less channels on TV.
Then as all those things became mainstream and innovations moved forward in the computer industry, our world shifted. It changed into something we had never seen before, perhaps never even imagined. One of the people who will always be synonymous with the advancement of computers and technology, and of course smart phones, passed away today. Steve Jobs, founder of Apple, died at age 56. I didn't know him personally, but many of the decisions he made in his lifetime have had a profound affect on mine. His innovations, along with the others in his field-- colleagues, competitors, friends, classmates-- have changed everything about the way I live my life. Every-day dependence on computers, smartphones, the Internet, is not something those a generation before me would have ever imagined. I would not have imagined it even at 16 when I got my first chunky cell phone that only functioned to actually make phone calls. His influence and ideas have shaped our world. And even though he wasn't the same kind of "world-changer" as Martin Luther King or Mother Theresa, he was still a "world-changer" and it leaves me a little sad tonight. It leaves me feeling like one of "the greats" has passed on.
Love Apple, or hate them, you can't deny the greatness of Steve Jobs.
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Laughing While I Can
We have had two thunderstorms since arriving in the North. One, last Friday night, consisted of rain, very minimal lightning if any, and a small clap of thunder.
I participated in a volunteer event this past Saturday and people were talking about the thunder storm and how scary it was. It made me chuckle to myself. Apparently there are not many thunder storms around here. I figured I should laugh while I can, because when that snow starts falling the tables will most certainly be turned and people will get their kicks over watching us greenhorns figure out how to work the snow blower.
I heard them talking on the radio this morning about a thunderstorm coming through sometime today. I again chuckled to myself--"Ha! They don't know what a real thunderstorm is." And then one of the biggest thunder claps I've heard in a long time about scared me off my chair. It will probably be the only one we hear, but it was a decent one and I could understand being scared of that one!
I participated in a volunteer event this past Saturday and people were talking about the thunder storm and how scary it was. It made me chuckle to myself. Apparently there are not many thunder storms around here. I figured I should laugh while I can, because when that snow starts falling the tables will most certainly be turned and people will get their kicks over watching us greenhorns figure out how to work the snow blower.
I heard them talking on the radio this morning about a thunderstorm coming through sometime today. I again chuckled to myself--"Ha! They don't know what a real thunderstorm is." And then one of the biggest thunder claps I've heard in a long time about scared me off my chair. It will probably be the only one we hear, but it was a decent one and I could understand being scared of that one!
Monday, October 3, 2011
Notables
- I was in and out of the DMV in 15 minutes with my new license in hand. Talk about a faster pace!
- I was offered a homemade chicken enchilada while I waited for my state inspection to be completed by a local mechanic. Awesome!
- If there is a space between two cars equaling 2 feet longer than your vehicle, it is safe to merge into that space.
- A safe following distance at 70+mph is just under 10 feet.
- Our new favorite game is trying to decipher all the personalized license plates. We've seen some doozies! (JNESSA, B3LAVTA, RNOV8TR, THE-WIZ, HUGADOG, OZZZY, NINO, YOUZ, LV-MUZK )
- You can be around 100+ people for an entire day and not one of them will mention football.
- You can always count on your friends to "watch the (insert SEC team here) game with you" via Facebook. It's almost the same...
- There are tons of things to do here. This weekend there was a Chili Cook-off, the Circus and Help-Portrait all in the same few block area.
- People are pretty nice.
- Having an actual season called Fall/Autumn that lasts more than three days... priceless.
Saturday, October 1, 2011
Help-Portrait
Took part in a great event today called "Help-Portrait". It was organized by Jeremy Cowart, a photographer to the stars. It's a movement to give back. To think about photography a little differently. To give photos instead of just take them.
The event I was part of had tons of volunteers! Eight studio set-ups that could accommodate up to 24 families per hour for shooting. There were people of all kinds there as far as volunteers and guests go. I met a friend, so that was exciting! We talked about going to an Indigo Girls concert, so as soon as they are back up this way I know I have someone to go with! Hooray!
The event itself went well. We had at least 50 families come through before noon and I think the afternoon was supposed to be a little slower. It was so interesting seeing folks who have never had photos taken have a chance to get them made with their families. I can hardly imagine not having photos of my family from my childhood. We didn't do a lot of professional photos, but we did have a lot of pictures! A lot of people who have fallen on hard times don't even have snap shots.
Anyway, it was a great event that went off really well. Most people were in and out in about an hour and walked out with their prints in hand. I was glad to be a part of it and glad to meet some new people. I think we're going to like it here.
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